With 368,147 new cases over the past 24 hours, India's total
infections stand at 19.93 million, while total fatalities rose by
3,417 to 218,959, according to health ministry data.
Medical experts say actual numbers across the country of 1.35
billion may be five to 10 times higher than the official tally.
The health ministry offered a glimmer of hope, reporting that
positive cases relative to the number of tests conducted fell on
Monday for the first time since at least April 15.
(For graphic on India's daily positivity rate -
https://graphics.reuters.com/HEALTH-CORONAVIRUS/INDIA/
gjnvwdqlrpw/chart.png)
India's coronavirus cases may peak between May 3-5, according to a
mathematical model from a team of scientists advising the
government, a few days earlier than a previous estimate as the virus
has spread faster than expected.
Hospitals have filled to capacity, medical oxygen supplies have run
short and morgues and crematoriums have been swamped as the country
deals with the surge in cases.
At least 11 states and union territories have imposed some form of
restrictions on movement to try and stem infections, but Prime
Minister Narendra Modi's government is reluctant to announce a
national lockdown, concerned about the economic impact.
"In my opinion, only a national stay at home order and declaring
medical emergency will help to address the current healthcare
needs," Bhramar Mukherjee, an epidemiologist with the University of
Michigan said on Twitter.
"The # of active cases is accumulating, not just the daily new
cases. Even the reported numbers state there are around 3.5M active
cases."
CRISIS TESTS MODI
The spike in infections is India's biggest crisis since Modi took
office in 2014. Modi has been criticised for not taking steps
earlier to curb the spread and for letting millions of largely
unmasked people attend religious festivals and crowded political
rallies in five states during March and April.
A forum of scientific advisers set up by the government warned
Indian officials in early March of a new and more contagious variant
of the coronavirus taking hold in the country, five scientists who
are part of the forum told Reuters.
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Despite the warning, four of
the scientists said the federal government did
not seek to impose major restrictions to stop
the spread of the virus.
It remains to be seen how his handling of the
crisis might affect Modi or his party
politically. The next general election is due in
2024. Modi's party was defeated in India's West
Bengal state in results declared on Sunday,
although it won in the neighbouring state of
Assam.
Leaders of 13 opposition parties signed a letter
on Sunday urging Modi to immediately launch free
national vaccination and to prioritise oxygen
supply to hospitals and health centres.
Several states have postponed widening a vaccination drive for
adults that was to start on Saturday due to a lack of vaccines.
Despite being the world's biggest producer of vaccines, India does
not have enough for itself. Only about 9% of the population has had
a dose.
India has struggled to increase capacity beyond 80 million doses a
month due to lack of raw materials and a fire at the Serum
Institute, which makes the AstraZeneca vaccine.
Pfizer Inc is in talks with the Indian government seeking an
"expedited approval pathway" for its COVID-19 vaccine, its CEO
Albert Bourla said on LinkedIn on Monday, announcing a donation of
medicines worth more than $70 million.
India said last month its drugs regulator will decide on
emergency-use applications for foreign COVID-19 vaccines, including
Pfizer, within three working days from application.
International aid has been pouring into India in response to the
crisis.
Britain will send another 1,000 ventilators to India, the government
said on Sunday. Prime ministers Boris Johnson and Modi are scheduled
to talk on Tuesday.
The Indian COVID-19 variant has now reached at least 17 countries
including Britain, Switzerland and Iran, leading several governments
to close their borders to people travelling from India.
(Reporting by Shilpa Jamkhandikar, Tanvi Mehta and Anuron Kumar
Mitra; Writing by Michael Perry; Editing by Lincoln Feast and Raju
Gopalakrishnan)
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